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'That punk' is 'going to want a security guarantee': How Steve Bannon influenced Trump's combative meeting with Volodymyr Zelenskyy

2:29
Trump calls for Ukraine, Russia to end war after face-to-face meeting with Zelenskyy
Penguin Random House
ByBenjamin Siegel
October 21, 2025, 4:22 PM

Steve Bannon hasn't worked in the White House for years, but he played a pivotal, and previously unreported, role in the explosive meeting between President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy earlier this year that changed the course of U.S. policy toward Ukraine.

The story is first reported in an excerpt in The Atlantic magazine from ABC News Chief Washington Correspondent Jonathan Karl's upcoming book, "Retribution: Donald Trump and the Campaign that Changed America."

"Retribution," a new book by Jonathan Karl.
Penguin Random House

Karl reports on a meeting of Trump's national security team shortly before Zelenskyy's visit to Washington in February where Trump stopped the meeting and asked then-national security adviser Michael Waltz to "get Steve Bannon" on the phone.

"Hey, Steve, I’ve got the boys here," Trump said. "I’m going to put you on speaker." 

Trump, keeping Bannon on speakerphone for half an hour, had the MAGA firebrand make his case to the national security team against the deal, and Zelenskyy, who he referred to as "that punk."

 "I f------ hate it," Bannon said, arguing that the deal "ties us to Ukraine."

"If that punk comes here, he’s going to want a security guarantee,” Bannon said of Zelenskyy to Trump and his top advisers. He told the group they "can’t trust Zelenskyy" or "any of the Europeans."

President Donald Trump and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky meet in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, February 28, 2025.
Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

The previously unreported conversation set the tone for Trump’s combative meeting in the Oval Office with Zelenskyy, which devolved into a tense shouting match in front of reporters and television cameras.

"You’re not acting at all thankful," Trump said to the Ukrainian leader. "You’re gambling with World War III."

Zelenskyy left the meeting early that afternoon, and the relationship between the United States and Ukraine was at an all-time low since the start of the conflict with Russia.

While their relationship recovered -- Zelenskyy visited the White House this past week seeking more American military assistance -- the moment underscored the volatile dynamic between the two leaders, and the abiding influence of Bannon over Trump’s thinking.

Steve Bannon, the former Donald Trump White House strategist, addresses the media at the Federal Correctional Institution Danbury where he is expected to begin his four-month sentence, July 1, 2024 in Danbury, Connecticut.
David Dee Delgado/Getty Images

In "Retribution," Karl also reports that Bannon managed to keep in touch with Trump and his camp discreetly from federal prison, while he served four months after he was found guilty of contempt of Congress.

Bannon developed a "coded" system that allowed his daughter and top aide to pass along messages to Trump via the limited email communications he was allowed in prison, which were subject to review by the Bureau of Prisons, according to the excerpt of Karl’s book in The Atlantic.

"Bannon claims that an investigative officer at Danbury -- an official he described as 'pure MAGA' -- had warned him that his communications were being reviewed by 'Main Justice,' otherwise known as the Biden administration," Karl writes.

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"So he developed a coded system to let 'the girls' know which messages were to be passed on to Trump or to those around him, in particular the aide Boris Epshteyn: "I had just a system to get to Boris, kind of in quasi-code, through [daughter Maureen] into [aide Grace Chong],' he said. Was there literally a code word? 'Well, we had -- ' he began, before catching himself. I don’t -- the Bureau of Prisons could go back through it. We had a way that they could get to him,'" Karl writes.

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According to Karl, Bannon used the system to tell Trump campaign officials he thought they were making a "huge mistake" by trying to "reduce tensions" across the country after the July 2024 assassination attempt against then-candidate Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania.

Editor's note: Profanity included in the book has been altered for this account and some text has been edited for style. "Retribution: Donald Trump and the Campaign that Changed America," by ABC News Chief Washington Correspondent Jonathan Karl, is being published Oct. 28 and is available for preorder at Penguin Random House.

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